Plastic waste, one of the most prevalent forms of global waste, is being increasingly utilized as a key feedstock in cement kilns. This shift helps cement producers tackle the plastic waste crisis ...
From de-commissioned wind blades to end-of-life tyres and agricultural waste, co-processing offers a circular solution to Europe’s waste problem – whilst reducing the cement sector’s CO2 emissions.
After a decade in the works, researchers at University of California, Los Angeles, have successfully devised a way to produce cement with 98% less CO2 emissions than traditional methods. The UCLA team ...
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Sustainable cement: An electrochemical process to help neutralize cement industry CO₂ emissions
Cement production is the second-largest industrial contributor to global greenhouse gas emissions, but its carbon footprint could be dramatically reduced with a new low-cost, scalable approach ...
A proposed low-carbon cement processing facility in Wilmington is under study by the Port of Los Angeles, with a public meeting to roll out the specifics scheduled for Nov. 1. The facility, which ...
Together, WindEurope, EuCIA, CEMBUREAU, EBI, Cefic UP/VE, Cefic Epoxy Europe and Glass Fibre Europe call on policymakers to recognise these benefits and facilitate the upscaling of co-processing with ...
Cement co-processing of end-of-life composites avoids up to 1 ton of CO2 emissions per ton processed
9 industry associations [1] have commissioned SGS INTRON to prepare a Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) report exploring the environmental impacts of treating End-of-Life (EoL) composites by co-processing ...
Norway’s Statoil saves hundreds of millions of euro in avoided carbon taxes by using CCS. Since 1996, the Sleipner gas field has stored about one million tonnes CO2 a year. A second project in the ...
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